Well, I was looking in the Assignment Bank for some Design Assignments to do that I haven’t done before. And do you know what I found? There is a good number of created assignments that have 0 doers so far. So I was thinking that some village peoples might like to make a friend with an […]

Today’s Daily Create had us pick three cards, each with a word, and write a story based on the words. This is a great writing prompt, largely because it is random enough to stimulate one’s thinking into unexpected areas. Here is my story. Race to the Mansion for a Bowl of Sugar another episode of […]

Hi Andrew,
Thanks. The audio doesn’t loop that well but you get the idea. As usual it was late.
Plotting of number six’s win is great.

I like the feebleness of the trampoline fight. This episode has more fist fights than usual. One of the things I like about the prisoner is the lack of punch-ups compared to contemporary shows. The violence is light (a balloon!). The focus on weird psychology etc is a lot more fun.

Design Assignment for Week 4 Out of the two choices of the “to do” assignments – I chose the book cover recreating the aesthetic of Spacesick . My first thought was the Dance of the Dead episode and having multiple skeletons, a sample was too close to that content and swaying me in replicating instead of creating. … Read more

I had all but forgotten this little gem until Geoff Cain (@geoffcain, on Twitter) triggered some memories this evening that had been pretty much buried in the muck of the sands of time. Geoff’s prisoner106 Book Cover “The Partridge Family #4 Meets The Prisoner” reminded me of the time back in the 70s when The Partridges were […]

Although my favorite writer of books about TV shows is the inimitable Peggy Herz of “All About Rhoda” and “The Truth About Fonzie” fame, Paul W. Fairman, of the Partridge Family novels, is a close second. He also wrote pulp … Continue reading →

I like how you’ve used the nature of a looping GIF and a looping audio file to recreate the scene.

It was particularly satisfying to see Number Six’ plan come to fruition in this episode — especially since so much of the plan seems disparate until it starts to fall into place. We are just as confused as viewers as the poor shopkeeper is in this scene.

As for the trampoline game, it’s a bit contrived, perhaps, but then again, look at some of the reality adventure competitions on TV today. In this context perhaps it’s a brilliant antecedent to Deathrace, Rollerball, The Running Man, …